Heart Attack
or Cardiac Arrest

Please share this with everyone your know. It is that important. You must know the difference between a
heart attack and cardiac arrest. The wrong emergency treatment while you are waiting for the professional
could kill.

This article was published by Daily Health News from information from the American Heart Association,
www.americanheart.org. and

Cardiac Arrest or Heart Attack

A heart attack and cardiac arrest are the same, right? Wrong. While many of us use the terms interchangeably,
those in the know are aware that they are two very different things. And, most importantly, that they require very
different emergency treatment. A person's likelihood of surviving a cardiac emergency has much to do with what
happens in the moments after it becomes apparent that something terrible is happening. Always call 911 first... but
be aware that what you tell the dispatcher can make the difference between life and death... and what you do while
awaiting the arrival of emergency personnel is not exactly the same for people suffering cardiac arrest as it is
for those having a heart attack.

The reason the distinction is important is that a person in cardiac arrest needs a defibrillator immediately and
the results of a new study show getting immediate care can save lives. Researchers found that one symptom in
particular -- noisy breathing, in the form of gasping, gurgling, moaning, snorting, even snoring -- is both a
result of cardiac arrest and a predictor of the likelihood of survival. I urge you to read this article
all the way to the end in order to understand some important differences that truly may end up saving a life --
yours, someone you care about, even that of a stranger in line behind you at the supermarket.

In order to understand, let's first define the terms. A heart attack is what happens when the
heart does not receive enough blood due to a blockage, leading to muscle damage. Cardiac arrest is when the heart
stops pumping blood due to an arrhythmia (ventricular fibrillation). This can be caused by a heart attack but can
also result from previous damage to the heart from a heart attack or from other heart conditions.

RECOGNIZING CARDIAC ARREST:
EVERY SECOND COUNTS

Cardiac arrest strikes immediately and without warning. If a person is upright when cardiac arrest occurs,
he/she will immediately collapse due to a loss of consciousness. Signs of cardiac arrest include a sudden loss of
responsiveness (for instance, no response when you tap on the victim's shoulder or call his/her name)... abnormal
breathing sounds (gasping, groaning, moaning, even snoring -- which can sound halting, labored or like gurgling).
These sounds are evidence that blood flow to the brain and body has been severely impaired and the brain can no
longer coordinate the functions of normal breathing.

How to respond...

Call 911.

Report whether the person is breathing or not and describe what the breathing sounds like to the
dispatcher.

Perform CPR (cardiopulmonary resuscitation). If a person's heart stops beating, even bystanders who are
untrained in CPR can help: Simply push hard and fast in the center of the chest until emergency personnel
arrive. Aim for 100 compressions/minute. The 911 emergency dispatcher can also tell you how to properly perform
CPR. A victim who receives CPR and/or defibrillation doubles or triples his chance of survival.

Get an automated external defibrillator (AED), if one is available, and use it at once. Commonly available
in malls, airplanes, gyms and office buildings, AEDs help restore normal heart rhythm. Though it is vastly
better to have a person who is trained in its use administer the treatment, the AED is designed to quickly
guide even the untrained responder through the right steps in its lifesaving use.

Important: In the University of Arizona study, published in the December 9, 2008,
issue of Circulation, presence of abnormal breathing correlated with a greater likelihood of survival. The
study found that of patients who received emergency intervention (CPR), 39% of those who had gasped survived...
compared with just 9% of those who did not have abnormal breathing. Survival plummeted among those who
didn't get bystander help (21% of gaspers, compared with 7% for non-gaspers), with the odds decreasing steadily in
relation to how long it took for emergency medical services to be administered.

RECOGNIZING HEART ATTACK:
EVERY MINUTE COUNTS

About one in four Americans recognizes the warning signs of a heart attack and would call or seek help for
someone appearing to have a heart attack, according to a study from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Once again, immediate action is critical, since faster intervention reduces the amount of muscle damage... and
extensive muscle damage can lead to cardiac arrest, right away or down the road.

The warning signs: The most widely recognized symptom of a heart attack is crushing
chest pain, often radiating to one or both arms. But many individuals who have heart attacks do not experience such
obvious symptoms, warns Keith Churchwell, MD, assistant professor of medicine and executive medical director of the
Vanderbilt Heart and Vascular Institute in Nashville, Tennessee. In fact, some heart attacks are "silent," without
the classic symptoms, or sometimes (though rarely) with no symptoms at all. Other signs include arm, jaw, neck,
back or abdominal pain, chest discomfort or tightness... shortness of breath... faintness... nausea or vomiting.
Women are more likely than men to experience shortness of breath, nausea, vomiting, and back or jaw pain as their
primary symptom.

How to respond...

Call 911. Even if you're not sure that symptoms constitute a heart attack, don't take chances. Calling 911
is nearly always the fastest way to get treatment, and people with chest pain who arrive in hospitals by
ambulance receive care more promptly.

Do not use a defibrillator on a person who is not in cardiac arrest. A heart attack by itself is
not a reason to use a defibrillator and its use in this situation would be dangerous and could cause
death.

Note: The American Heart Association offers online CPR and AED training at
www.americanheart.org. This should be paired with hands-on instruction. To find a CPR class
near you, enter your zip code or state at www.americanheart.org.

Alertness to the signs and symptoms of cardiac arrest and heart attack is the single best way to increase the
odds a person will survive. Listen to your body, Dr. Churchwell urges, and see your doctor if something seems
amiss. If someone near you collapses, move quickly to get help. Seconds and minutes will make a difference and
doing something is always better than doing nothing.